War Finance Corp. v. Ready

2 Tenn. App. 61, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 61 (War Finance Corp. v. Ready) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
War Finance Corp. v. Ready, 2 Tenn. App. 61, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CROWNOYER, J.

This action is not styled correctly. It is here styled as it was in the court below. It should be styled, I. E. Ready, et al., plaintiffs in error, v. War Finance Corporation, defendant in error, as a judgment was rendered against the defendant below, I. E. Ready, and he has appealed in error to this court.

This was an action by the War Finance Corporation' to recover on a $1200 note, executed by T. B. Ready, W. T. Ready, and I. E. Ready, it being averred in the declaration that the three defendants had on June 1, 1923, executed said note to the First State Bank at Woodbury, who transferred same to the War Finance Corporation before maturity.

Judgment was taken by default against T. B. and W. T. Ready, but I. E. Ready pleaded non est factum.

*63 The action was tried by the judge and a jury and resulted in a judgment against all three defendants, to which I. E. Ready excepted, appealed in error to this court, and has assigned the following errors:

1. There was no evidence to support the verdict.
2. The evidence does not, as a matter of law, establish authority in the parties to sign the name of defendant, I. E. Ready, to the note sued on.
3. Because the two witnesses, T. B.. and W. T. Ready, being joint makers were incompetent to establish the authority to sign I. E. Ready’s name to the note.
4. The court erred in excluding certain testimony to the effect that I. E. Ready had notified the bank that he had not signed any note, except the one for $120, before the execution of the $1200 note sued on.
5. The court erred in permitting certain testimony to go to the jury, over defendant’s objection, that defendant, I. E. Ready, had signed prior renewals of the $1200 note, without producing said renewal notes or accounting for their absence.
6. The court erred in admitting certain evidence, over defendant’s objection, that T. B. Ready had never refused to sign notes for I. E. Ready, as it was immaterial and tended to prejudice the jury against I. E. Ready.

The contention of the plaintiff below, "War Finance Corporation, was that the three defendants below had executed a $1200 note to the' First State Bank at Woodbury, on June 1, 1923, due in six months, and that that bank had transferred said note to the War Finance Corporation before maturity, and that it was the owner and lawful holder thereof. The first two named defendants did not contest liability and judgment was taken by default against them, but I. E. Ready pleaded non est factum and insisted that he had not signed the note nor authorized any one in the premises to bind him. However, it was contended by the plaintiff below that the original $1200 note had been executed to the First State Bank some seven to ten years ago, and that I. E. Ready had authorized W. T. Ready to sign his name to the original note, and that said note had been renewed every six months thereafter up to the present, and that I. E. Ready had signed several renewals of said note at different times, and at other times had authorized W. T. Ready to sign his name to said note, and had stated to T„ B. Ready and W. T. Ready that at any time it might be inconvenient for them to see him in order to get his signature, it would be all right for W. T. Ready to sign his (I. E. Ready’s) name to said note, as W. T. Ready could write a better hand than I. E. Ready, and the plaintiff insists that in pursuance to this general authority, W. T. Ready had *64 signed I. E, Ready’s name to tbe note sued on, and for this reason I. E. Ready was liable on said note.

There were only three witnesses whose testimony was material to the transaction, that is, T. B. and W. T. Ready testified to the facts substantially in accordance with the complainant’s contention below, while I. E. Ready denied that he had ever signed the $1200 note and denied that he had ever authorized T. B. or W. T. Ready to sign it jior him.'

We do not think that the first assignment of error is well taken, as there was material testimony submitted to the jury that I. E. Ready did authorize W. T. Ready to sign the original note and that he afterwards actually signed renewals of the same, and authorized W. T. Ready to sign his name to the note when it was not convenient to have him sign it. Both T. B. and W. T. Ready testified to these facts, hence, this assignment of error must be overruled.

By the second assignment of error it is urged that the evidence does not, as a matter of law, establish authority in the parties to sign the name of defendant, I. E. Ready, to the note sued on. That is, taking all the proof of the plaintiff, which consists only of the testimony of T. B. and W. T. Ready, the evidence does not arise to the dignity of establishing authority .in the two Readys to sign the name of I. E. Ready to the note involved, because the note sued on is not traced from its origin and determined to be the renewal note about which the alleged conversation and authorization occurred at the time the alleged authority was given, and that the renewals were continued without change or alteration down to the note that was renewed on June 1, 1923; and sued on in this case.

The evidence of the plaintiff below shows that the $1200 note was executed by T. B. Ready, et al., to the First State Bank at Wood-bury about seven or eight years ago, and that I."E. Ready’s name was signed to said note, and that there was but one note of this amount executed to said bank by T. B., W. T., and I. E. Ready, that a.t the time this note was executed, T. B. Ready asked I. E. Ready to sign the note, and that I. E. Ready requested W. T. Ready to sign his name to the note as he could write a better hand, and that he authorized W. T. Ready to sign his name to the note at any time it was not convenient for him to see I. E. Ready, and that the note was renewed once every six months, and that I. E. Ready actually signed his own name to several renewals, and at other times W. T. Ready signed I. E. Ready’s name in pursuance to the authorization. They testified that it was renewed every six months, so we think that the note sued on has been so traced and identified, and that there can be no reasonable doubt that it was a renewal of the original note. The contention that it is not shown by the evidence that the note was renewed for the same amount every time is not *65 borne out by the evidence.. We think it is reasonable to infer from the evidence that it was renewed each time for the same amount, hence, we think this assignment of error is not well taken, and must, therefore, be overruled.

We do not think that the third assignment of error is well taken, as co-makers of the note are competent witnesses to any fact within their knowledge. The case of Harvey v. Sweasy, 4 Humph., 448, holding that a joint maker of a note is not a competent witness to prove that he was authorized to sign the name of his co-maker as agent, arose from the fact that a person interested in the issue to be tried was incompetent to testify, but this has been changed by statute, and a party in interest is now a competent witness. See Shannon’s Code, section 5596.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 61, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/war-finance-corp-v-ready-tennctapp-1925.